GETTING BIN LADEN : What happened that night in Abbottabad

The operation that killed Osama bin Laden on the night of May 1-2, 2011 lasted roughly forty minutes from the moment the first helicopter crossed into Pakistani airspace until the last SEAL team member departed the compound in Abbottabad. In those forty minutes, the United States concluded a manhunt that had begun a decade earlier in the rubble of lower Manhattan.
The raid was carried out by a team from the Naval Special Warfare Development Group — SEAL Team Six — working under direct CIA operational authority. The planning had taken months, accelerating after an intelligence breakthrough traced bin Laden's likely location to the Abbottabad compound through patient surveillance of a courier network. The compound itself was large, heavily walled, and conspicuously private — a structure that had stood out enough in an otherwise modest neighborhood that CIA analysts had concluded it was concealing someone of significance.
The decision to conduct a ground raid rather than an air strike was made because the president wanted confirmation of identity. A missile strike would have removed any doubt about the outcome but would have left no physical evidence. A raid was higher risk — both to the operators and diplomatically, since Pakistan had not been informed — but would produce certainty.
The helicopters encountered problems immediately. One lost lift in the compound's walled courtyard and was landed hard against the outer wall to prevent a crash. The team adapted and proceeded on foot. Bin Laden was found on the compound's upper floor and shot twice — once in the chest, once in the head — after a brief confrontation. His body was confirmed by multiple members of the team and subsequently through DNA comparison.
The entire sequence, from border crossing to extraction, was monitored in real time by President Obama and his national security team in the White House Situation Room. The photograph of that watching group became one of the defining images of the Obama presidency.
Related Stories

The War That Could Redraw the World: What's Happening in Iran
On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel launched a coordinated air campaign against Iran with a scope and precision that caught even seasoned Middle East analysts off guard. The target: Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Kh...
The US-Iran War: What It Means for Your Gas Bill
Ten days into the US-Israel military operation against Iran, Americans are feeling it at the pump. Gas prices have surged roughly 20% since joint airstrikes launched on February 28, with the national average for regular...
Water Crisis: Cities Running Dry Across India
Delhi's groundwater levels have fallen approximately one meter per year for two decades—a decline that is measurable, inexorable, and unsustainable. Bangalore's aquifers are nearly depleted despite being a major metropol...